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Article • August 1, 2021 • from PLN August, 2021
) article to argue Black Americans face a higher risk of hospitalization and death from COVID-19. He cited two other articles to contend that although skin color should not affect health outcomes from ...
Publication • November 9, 2021
the Board’s authority to fulfill its Charter mission as an independent agency providing regulatory oversight of the Department and the Correctional Health Services; WHEREAS, any weakening of the Board’s ...
Case • 1985
and propriety of health care services provided by the defendants. On November 18, 1976 the panel filed its first report, stating that, in its opinion, there was a systematic denial of acceptable medical care ...
Article • June 30, 2017 • from PLN July, 2017
Alley, 71, who’s serving 64 years for assault, claims he’s been trying to get hep C treatment for the past nine years but has been told he has too many other health issues to be a good ...
Publication • 2014
Filed under: Immigration
detention, DWN has chosen to focus its report on the family detention center in Artesia, New Mexico. REPORT METHODOLOGY & ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This report was developed through stories from women and children ...
Brief • August 5, 2015
the.Jails. DMH is responsible for providing mental health care in the 11 Jails through its Jail Mental Health Services program. 12 13 14 6. The Sheriff is an elected official who is responsible ...
Case • 1991
as in its failure to include adequate AIDS education and counseling. As mentioned, this circuit has recognized that a failure of a correctional system to provide basic psychiatric and mental health care can ...
, unqualified and/or incompetent doctors, nurses and physician assistants in its $1 billion per year prison health care program. The centerpiece of the September 17, 2004 Order is its requirement for CDC to hire ...
In America's Prisons, Vera Justice Institute (2006), 118 pp. Reviewed by John E. Dannenberg The Commission on Safety and Abuse in America's Prisons released its June 2006 report Confronting Confinement which ...
In-the-News Article • April 12, 2015
its place. Under the proposed $66.1 million three-year contract, Corizon Health Inc. would replace Unity Health Care as the medical and mental health care provider for D.C.’s ...
Case • 2002
prisoners' blood for medical tests, and the blood is sent to an outside laboratory for any tests other than a pin-prick blood sugar check. After the laboratory completes its tests, an outside company ...
of the prisoners and ordered extensive injunctive relief. The opinion sets forth extensive factual findings that give a great amount of detail concerning the provision of health care services in the Arizona DOC ...
Chicago?s Cook County to abate unconstitutionally sordid, unsafe and abusive conditions at its Juvenile Temporary Detention Center (JTDC), conditions that had been tied to staff improprieties and inaction ...
Article • January 8, 2018 • from PLN January, 2018
to decrease its use.” At the time of the report, almost 8% of the state’s prison population was held in solitary.  “Advocacy organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union have ...
Article • November 6, 2018 • from PLN November, 2018
Filed under: Editorials
medical contractor, Corizon Health, are unwilling to provide minimally adequate health care, with the latter being more focused on enriching its corporate owners. The privatization model is simple: get ...
Article • July 7, 2015 • from PLN July, 2015
to enforce its prior orders, concluding that clear and convincing evidence showed that prison officials at the Substance Abuse Treatment Facility in Corcoran had consistently failed to provide qualified sign ...
in segregation. It requires the DOC to periodically provide the DLC with documentation of its compliance with the agreement and hive a mental health expert, retained and paid for by the DLC, limited access to DOC ...
Article • July 15, 2011 • from PLN July, 2011
of living quarters where other prisoners can observe, overhear and taunt. “It’s bizarre,” said H. Steven Moffic, a psychiatry professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, who has written about ...
. When JHA visited the facility on June 21, 2011, it housed 3,618 prisoners – a population roughly 17% above its rated design capacity of 3,098. Menard is the state’s largest maximum-security prison ...
Article • July 2, 2019 • from PLN July, 2019
and will combine the Marion County courts, a mental and physical health assessment and intervention center, and detention facility.  For-profit prison company CoreCivic, formerly Corrections Corporation ...
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